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Disinfection by-product formation of UV treated swimming pool water
Spiliotopoulou, Aikaterini; Hansen, Kamilla Marie Speht; Andersen, Henrik Rasmus
Published in:Proceedings of the 6th International Conference Swimming Pool & Spa
Publication date:2015
Document VersionPublisher's PDF, also known as Version of record
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Citation (APA):Spiliotopoulou, A., Hansen, K. M. S., & Andersen, H. R. (2015). Disinfection by-product formation of UV treatedswimming pool water. In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference Swimming Pool & Spa
Disinfection by-product formation of UV treated
swimming pool water
Aikaterini Spiliotopoulou*, Kamilla M. S. Hansen**, Henrik R. Andersen**
*Water ApS, Farum Gydevej 64, 3520 Farum, Denmark
(E-mail: [email protected]) **Department of Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Miljøvej
113, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
(E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected])
Abstract
Water samples from 3 indoor swimming pool facilities were tested to evaluate UV-induced effects
on swimming pool water chemistry. Concentration change of several DBPs was investigated in
experiments including medium pressure UV treatment with and without chlorine and post-UV
chlorination. Post-UV chlorine consumption increased, dose-dependently, with UV treatment
dose. A clear absence of trihalomethane formation by UV and UV with chlorine was observed.
The post-UV chlorination clearly induced formation of DBPs; however, for the total
trihalomethanes (TTHM), the inductions were not more than what could be replicated by
performing the DBP formation assay with higher chlorine concentrations to simulate extended
chlorination. Post-UV chlorination of water from a swimming pool that continuously uses UV
treatment to control combined chlorine could not induce secondary formation of DBPs. The
trihalomethane induction might result from a kinetic increase in formation by UV. However, this
does not imply that higher trihalomethane concentrations would occur in pools that apply
continuous UV treatment. The bromine fraction of the halogens in the formed trihalomethanes
increased with UV dose, which indicates that UV breaks bromine atoms from larger molecules
participating in trihalomethane production during the post-UV chlorination. No significant effect
on DBP formation was observed by the photo-inducible radical forming molecules NO3- and H2O2,
which may either occur occasionally in high concentrations in pool water or be added in a DBP
reducing treatment process, respectively.
Keywords
DBP formation assay; medium pressure UV lamp; Post-UV chlorination; trihalomethane
INTRODUCTION
Chlorine is extensively used due to its efficiency to deactivate viruses and bacteria. However,
chlorine reacts with organic matter, enhancing DBP formation, which is suspected to be genotoxic.
To reduce combined chlorine concentration in the pools, medium pressure (MP) ultraviolet (UV)
lamps are used but these may produce chloroform. So far, there are several studies with
contradictory results regarding the effects of UV in DBP formation (Beyer et al., 2004; Cassan et
al., 2011, 2006; Kristensen et al., 2009; Cimetiere and De Laat, 2014).
It is believed that radicals reacting with organic matter dissolved in pool water resulted in activated
compounds, which produced significantly more chloroform (THM) when subsequently chlorinated.
In chlorinated water, direct photolysis of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) can produce hydroxyl and
chlorine radicals (Nowell and Hoigne, 1992; Watts and Linden, 2007) which are used as an
Advanced oxidation process (AOP) to remove contaminants (Sichel et al., 2011). Hydrogen
peroxide is also used for chloroform prevention in combination with UV (Appel, 2013). Since
nitrate already exists in natural water, and after being exposed to UV light, creates hydroxyl
radicals, so it is also used as an AOP (Lyon et al., 2012).
In the present study, the effect of chlorine, nitrate, and hydrogen peroxide as radical initiators was
investigated via addition prior to UV irradiation. The concentration change of 4 well known volatile
DBPs (chloroform, bromodichloromethane, dibromochloromethane and bromoform) was
investigated in authentic swimming pool water with a medium pressure UV-lamp. The DBP and
more specific total trihalomethane (TTHM) level measured after UV and post-UV chlorination was
compared with a sample without UV exposure. Water from a third swimming pool using continuous
UV treatment was exposed to UV in the laboratory to investigate whether further UV could induce
DBP formation.
METHODS
Reagents All chemicals and standard solutions were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich.
Water characterization Colorimetric reactions were used to quantify chlorine, hydrogen peroxide, nitrate, and nitrite. For
characterization of the pool water, a cell test kit (LCK 310, Hach Lange, Germany) was used to
measure free and total chlorine.
During experiments the residual chlorine was determined using 2,2-azino-bis(3-
ethylbenzothiazoline)-6-sulfonic acid-diammonium salt (ABTS), as described by Pinkernell et al.
(2000).
Hydrogen peroxide was determined using potassium TiO-oxalate (Antoniou and Andersen, 2014),
while test kits (NO3- 09713 and NO2- 114776, Merck, Germany) were used to determined nitrate
and nitrite.
A Shimadzu ASI-V UVC/Persulphate analyzer was utilized for the quantification of the remaining
in the samples.
Pool water Pool water was collected from public swimming pools (two main practice basins and a hot water
therapy basin (Denmark)). The two practice basins are typical public pools, temperature 26 °C, sand
filter with flocculation, a side stream activated carbon filter and a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of
4 h. The hot water therapy basin has a much higher bather load and a faster development of
combined chlorine, due to the higher temperature (34 oC); hence, it is operated with medium
pressure UV lamps in a side stream of about 20% of the circulation, in order to effectively control
the combined chlorine concentration. The pool has sand filters and the HRT is just 0.5 h.
Filling water for the swimming pools came from the public distribution network, which is based on
non-chlorinated ground water. Water samples were collected during regular operating hours and
were analyzed immediately after their collection, upon which the pool water quality (pH, NO3-, free
and combined chlorine) were determined.
DBPs Analysis The analyses were performed by Purge&Trap GC-MS as previously published by Hansen et al.
(2012a).
UV treatment UV treatment was performed in a quasi-collimated beam apparatus with a doped medium pressure
lamp (P = 700 W, ScanResearch, Denmark) with enhanced output in the lower range (200-240 nm),
compared to standard mercury medium pressure lamp, as it is described by Hansen et al. (2013b).
DBP formation with chlorine After UV exposure, chlorine was added to the samples (post-UV chlorination) based on the chlorine
consumption, in order to achieve a chlorine residual after 24 h of either 1-3 mg/L (typical chlorine
levels) or 31-33 mg/L (high chlorine levels). The chlorine consumption was determined in pre-
experiments and concentrations were measured by ABTS. The pH was adjusted to 7.1 and the
samples were stored at 25 °C. After 24 h, the residual chlorine was determined and the samples
were analyzed the same day for DBPs.
Experiment This study was carried out as laboratory batch experiments to ensure controlled experimental
conditions. In general, a sample of pool water was spiked with a radical initiator (Cl2, NO3- or
H2O2) and then UV irradiated. The irradiation time varied corresponding to ½ - 2 days dose of UV
in the real treatment situation. After exposure, the sample was either analyzed for DBPs or chlorine
was added (post-UV chlorination), and allowed to react for 24 h before DBP analysis.
The water was analyzed for DBPs before UV exposure in order to establish initial values, after UV
exposure, and after post-UV chlorination to investigate whether DBPs are formed during UV
irradiation or after reaction with chlorine.
Three samples were not exposed to UV light (Dark) by covering the sample with a piece of
cardboard, but otherwise treated the same way. One sample was a control for the handling of
samples during UV exposure and was not post-UV chlorinated, but directly analyzed for DBPs. The
two other samples were post-UV chlorinated and were controls for the formation potential of the
pool water without UV exposure.
Since chlorine concentration varied in the collected pool water, chlorine was added so 3 mg/L was
present before UV exposure. Some experiments were conducted without chlorine to investigate the
effect of high and typical chlorine concentrations.
To examine the effect of nitrate, some samples were spiked with 11.1 mg/L NO3--N (50 mg/L NO3
-)
prior to UV exposure. When hydrogen peroxide was added until the concentration was 1.0 mg/L
after reaction with the chlorine residual from the pool. The radiation time varied. The prolonged
exposure time was necessary to achieve 80% removal of H2O2 through photolysis, as it is applied
by the company Pool Water Treatment (Rotterdam, Netherlands) for pool treatment (Appel, 2013).
Water from the hot water therapy basin was only used in selected experiments to examine the
possibility to induce formation of DBPs in pool water already treated with UV light.
Data treatment The data treatment was conducted using MS Excel and Prism Graph Pad. The results of the
different treatments were compared with an-one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s Multiple Comparison
Test with 95% confidence level. For all the different treatments there were triplicates (or five
replicates for UV1d/Cl2,Cl2 and Dark/Cl2,Cl2). The treatments were grouped according to significant
difference (P< 0.05). All treatments with insignificant difference were given the same letter. The
error bars in the figures indicate the standard deviation among the replicates.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Water samples from 3 indoor swimming pool facilities were tested to evaluate UV-induced effects
on swimming pool water chemistry. The 4 investigated DBPs were detected in the collected pool
water, indicating that UV is not responsible for the creation of the entire amount of these by-
products. The experiments were conducted as batch experiments and thus the DBP formation may
be different in a long-scale experiment where the water is treated continually with UV light.
Chemical characterization of pool water For the 3 indoor pool water used for the experiments, the initial pH ranged from 7.10 to 7.24. The
TOC, free chlorine, and combined chlorine concentrations were measured and ranged from 1.58 to
2.14 mg/L, 0.44 to 1.37 mg/L, and 0.17 to 0.36 mg/L, respectively. Regarding the nitrate analysis,
untreated water sample was analyzed and exhibited initial concentrations ranging from 2.2 to 6.1
mg/L NO3--N. Having determined the initial nitrate concentration, some water samples were spiked
with nitrate stock solution in order to have nitrate concentrations in the beginning of the experiment
equal to 11.1 mg/L NO3--N. After UV exposure, nitrate spiked samples were analyzed for nitrite.
The nitrite concentration was 0.20 and 0.45 mg/L-N.
Chlorine consumption The chlorine consumption varied greatly among the treatments, the lowest chlorine consumption is
observed in solely chlorinated samples (Dark/Cl2, Cl2: Figure 1). Chlorine consumption tends to
increase with increasing chlorine concentration (Dark/Cl2,Cl2 vs. Dark,High Cl2). The highest
chlorine consumption is observed in post-UV chlorinated samples and it appears to be proportional
to the prolonged exposure time (UV½d/Cl2,Cl2 vs. UV1d/Cl2,Cl2 vs. UV2d/Cl2,Cl2 vs. UV3.4d,Cl2).
According to Weng et al. (2012), the concentration of nitrite in irradiated water samples is
increasing after the depletion of chlorine, due to nitrate photolysis. Nitrite formation might increase
chlorine consumption since nitrite is oxidized by chlorine to form nitrate (Diyamandoglu et al.,
1990). However, no change could be detected in the chlorine consumption in the experiments with
added nitrate (UV1d/Cl2,Cl2 vs UV1d/Cl2/NO3-,Cl2).
In the experiment with addition of hydrogen peroxide as radical initiator, the chlorine consumption
was similar to the samples with prolonged UV exposure (UV3.4d/H2O2,Cl2 vs UV3.4d,Cl2).
Figure 1. Chlorine consumption in 24h at 25 °C at the different experimental treatments for the three investigated swimming pools.
The error bars represent the standard deviation of duplicate analysis.
Formation of volatile by-products Effect of UV on trihalomethanes
The trihalomethanes only include the chlorinated and brominated trihalomethanes: chloroform,
bromodichloromethane, dibromochloromethane and bromoform. We hypothesize that they are
formed from the same precursor and the variation among the different species is due to the ratio of
bromine to chlorine.
The investigated swimming pools were chlorinated and bromine mainly stems from a low
concentration in the source water, thus chloroform was the most pronounced of the THMs (Figure
2). UV treatment of swimming pools has been suspected to create THMs directly in the UV
chamber. However, comparing the initial concentrations with the solely UV treated samples, it was
seen that the level of the four different THMs was not increase. Thus, the THMs were not formed
directly during the UV irradiation. Actually, for the brominated THMs, a reduction was seen for the
experimental treatments based exclusively on UV irradiation (UV1d), compared to the initial value
(Figures 2). Hansen et al. (2013b) have found that the direct photolysis of THMs increased with
increasing amount of bromine incorporated. Therefore, bromoform was the easiest to photolyze,
while chloroform was the most difficult (Hansen et al., 2013b). The level of the brominated THMs
in the pool water was close to or under the quantification limit. However, the same tendency was
found in our results.
Post-UV chlorination of water from a swimming pool that continuously uses UV treatment to
control combined chlorine could not induce formation of most DBPs. Both, the matching induction
of trihalomethanes from post-UV chlorination and simulated extended chlorination time, and the
absence of inducible trihalomethanes in water from a continuously UV treated pool, indicate that
literature reports of experimentally induced trihalomethane formation by UV might results from a
kinetic increase in formation by UV. However, this does not imply that higher trihalomethane
concentrations would occur in pools that apply continuous UV treatment.
The bromine fraction of the halogens in the formed trihalomethanes increased with UV dose, which
indicates that UV breaks bromine atoms from larger molecules that participate in trihalomethane
production during the post-UV chlorination.
Figure 2. Total trihalomethane formation at different experimental treatments of swimming pool water from A) Lyngby swimming
pool and B) Gladsaxe swimming pool. The light green area indicates the amount of bromine incorporated in trihalomethane, which
also are given as % bromine per trihalomethane on top of the bar.
The THMs were not formed directly by UV, however, in post-UV chlorinated samples, an increased
amount of THM was found. A likely explanation is that UV treatment makes the organic
compounds in the pool water more reactive toward chlorine and thereby can act as precursor for
Figure 3. Schematic representation of brominated species formation.
THM formation. So when the activated organic matter meets chlorine again, THMs were formed.
Cimetiere and De Laat (2014) found a similar increase in THM formation when chlorinating after
UV exposure by low pressure lamp. Increasing the UV exposure time (UV½d/Cl2,Cl2; UV1d/Cl2,Cl2;
UV2d/Cl2,Cl2; UV3.4d,Cl2) decreased the chloroform formation and increased the formation of the
brominated THMs (Figure 2) indicating that the activated organic matter was further
photodegradable. The bromodichloromethane was found in higher concentrations than
dibromochloromethane and bromoform due to that the available bromine was limited and there had
to be more bromine present in order to form dibromochloromethane and bromoform than
bromodichloromethane.
It has been hypothesized that UV only accelerates the chloroform formation and that over time the
amount of chloroform that is formed in a swimming pool is the same with and without UV (Kaas
and Andersen, 2007), since the amount of precursor is limited and the main removal process for
pollution is oxidation and mineralization by chlorine (Judd and Bullock, 2003). This was examined
by adding a higher chlorine dose in non-irradiated samples (Dark, High Cl2) to simulate long-term
residence time of the water in the basin. In most cases, a significant difference was not found in
chloroform levels for post-UV chlorinated samples (UV½d/Cl2,Cl2; UV1d/Cl2,Cl2; UV2d/Cl2,Cl2; UV3.4d,Cl2 and UV3.8d,Cl2) and for the samples with simulated longer residence time (Dark,High
Cl2: Figure 2). Thus, the obtained data supported the hypothesis.
Furthermore, examining the THMs as a sum of the four THMs (total trihalomethane; TTHM), it
was seen that the post-UV chlorinated sample (UV1d/Cl2,Cl2) was not significantly different from
the samples with simulated long-term residence time (Dark,High Cl2: Figure 2).
The percentages shown in TTHM (Figures 2) represented the amount of bromine incorporated in
the TTHM. The bromine incorporation increases with increasing UV exposure (UV½d/Cl2,Cl2 vs. UV1d,Cl2; UV1d/Cl2,Cl2 vs. UV2d/Cl2,Cl2 vs. UV3.4d,Cl2 and UV3.8d,Cl2), especially for the main
pool in Lyngby. A likely explanation is that UV broke down the bonds between the organic carbon-
based compound and bromine (Figure 3), so that bromide was liberated into the water. The UV
treatment also contributed to carbon activation, making it more reactive. When chlorine was added
after UV exposure, bromide was oxidized to hypobromous acid (White, 1992), which reacted with
the newly formed THM precursors in competition with chlorine, to form Br-Cl-DBPs. Thus,
bromine was transferred from the larger brominated molecules to smaller volatile compounds like
bromodichloromethane, dibromochloromethane and bromoform.
The experimental treatment of the water from the hot therapy pool in Gladsaxe showed that there
could be slightly more induced TTHM by post-UV chlorination, compared to initial, however this
was not significant. The hot water therapy pool had UV as a part of the water treatment to decrease
the combined chlorine levels. These results also supported the hypothesis that UV accelerated, but
not increased, the THM formation.
Effects of radicals on DBP formation
Hydroxyl radicals from ozone based AOPs have previously been found to activate organic matter in
swimming pool water, which formed increased amount of THM when subsequently chlorinated
(Glauner et al., 2005). During UV treatment, hydroxyl radicals can be produced by several
processes such as photolysis of chlorine, hydrogen peroxide, or nitrate.
To investigate the effect of radicals on the DBP formation, experiments with addition of nitrate,
hydrogen peroxide or chlorine were performed. Concerning the effect of either nitrate or hydrogen
peroxide on DBP formation, no significant change in the concentrations of TTHM (Figures 2) was
observed.
An insignificant change in the concentration of the investigated DBPs was observed for direct
photolysis (UV1d vs. UV1d/Cl2). For the post-UV chlorinated samples, the addition of chlorine
before the UV treatment did not significantly affect the formation of the investigated DBPs
(UV1d,Cl2 vs. UV1d/Cl2,Cl2; Figures 2). Thus, direct formation of DBPs during the UV irradiation
by reaction with chlorine radicals appeared unimportant.
CONCLUSION
UV treatment followed by chlorination amplified THM formation
Radicals do not significantly affect the THM formation
THMs are not formed in the UV reactor but in secondary reactions that occur after chlorine
addition
UV treatment amplified the fraction of brominated THM
UV accelerates THM formation but does not clearly increase the total amount formed
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